Jesus’ First Disciples

Two men stood by the riverbank, hearts stirred by the words of a wild-eyed prophet. “Behold, the Lamb of God,” John the Baptist said (John 1:36). That was all it took. Andrew and another followed the stranger from Nazareth. There was no lightning. No trumpet blast. Just a man walking. And a quiet invitation: “Come and see” (John 1:39).

They came. They saw. And they stayed.

Andrew couldn’t keep the moment to himself. He rushed to find his brother. “We’ve found the Messiah,” he said (John 1:41). That’s how it works, isn’t it? A spark of faith jumps from heart to heart. One changed life reaches for another.

Next came Philip. Jesus found him directly. “Follow Me,” He said to Philip (John 1:43). And Philip did. Then Philip ran to Nathanael, bubbling with joy. 

This is how the kingdom grows. One person encounters Jesus and tells another. A brother tells a brother. A friend tells a friend. Hearts open. And one by one, lives are changed.

Come and see. That’s the invitation. Read John 1:35–51. You’ll find Him there, still walking, and still calling.

Still saying, “Come.”

I’m Lonnie Davis, and these are thoughts worth thinking.

Behold the Lamb!

Today’s Scripture is John 1:29

The next day John saw Jesus coming toward him and said, “Look, the Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the world!”

On the banks of the Jordan River, as he saw Jesus approaching, John could have said many things.

“Look, the King of kings.”
“Look, the promised Messiah.”
“Look, the One who will judge the world.”

But John the Baptist said, “Look, the Lamb of God.”

Lamb is not a title of triumph, but of sacrifice. It doesn’t stir visions of thrones or armies, but of altars and blood. Lambs were for slaughter. Lambs were born for sacrifice. And that’s how John introduces Jesus—not as a conqueror, but as a sacrifice. Not as a lion, but a lamb.

This Lamb would be sacrificed on a cross to take away sin, not just for the Jews, but for you! For me! For your children’s children. He said, For the the whole world!

Can you imagine that moment? The dusty path, the Jordan River lapping nearby, and John lifting his finger to point at Jesus. The world would never be the same.

What about you? Can you see Him? The Lamb who takes away your guilt, your shame, your past? Don’t just look… follow.

Today, open your heart and let that Lamb lead you.

I’m Lonnie Davis, and these are thoughts worth thinking.

Tempting Jesus

Our text for today is Matthew 4:1, which marks the beginning of Jesus’ temptations.

“Then Jesus was led by the Spirit into the wilderness to be tempted by the devil.” 

I call two great lessons from this story:

First, notice it says, “Jesus was led by the Spirit.” That’s something to ponder. It wasn’t Satan’s trap that brought Him to this place of temptation. It was God’s training ground. It reminds us that some of life’s hardest moments aren’t signs we’re off course; they’re merely part of the curriculum of life.

Second, notice that Satan doesn’t start his temptation with a sword or a storm, he starts with a question: “If You are the Son of God…” That phrase slices deep. Just one chapter earlier, God’s voice from heaven declared, “This is My beloved Son.” Satan puts that truth under attack. Satan didn’t go after Jesus’ miracles or mission; he went after His identity.

Isn’t that what the enemy does to us also? After we hear God’s word affirm that we are His child,  he whispers to us: “Are you really His child? Are you sure?”

But Jesus didn’t argue with Satan. He didn’t panic. He answered with Scripture. Three times He said, “It is written…” That’s how He stood firm.

What about you? Are you in a wilderness? Are you hearing those same doubts? Remember, being tested doesn’t mean you’ve failed—it means God is forming and making you stronger!

Like Jesus, we must let Scripture speak louder than the whispers of Satan.

I’m Lonnie Davis and these are thoughts worth thinking.

The Baptism of Jesus

Our verse for today is Matthew 3:13

“At that time Jesus came from Galilee to the Jordan to be baptized by John.”

The baptism of Jesus is one of the most powerful and symbolic moments in the New Testament. Though Jesus had no sin to confess, He came to the Jordan River to be baptized by John. At first, John the Baptist was hesitant. “I need to be baptized by You,” he said. But Jesus answered, “Let it be so now; it is fitting for us to fulfill all righteousness.”

In this act, Jesus chose to step into the waters with humanity. He was beginning His public ministry, and this act became a declaration. He came not to stand above us, but with us. As He rose from the water, the heavens opened, the Spirit descended like a dove, and the Father’s voice thundered with approval: “This is My beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased.”

What a beautiful picture of the Trinity—Father, Son, and Spirit all present in one sacred moment. Before Jesus ever preached a sermon or performed a miracle, God’s voice said He was already pleased. That’s a truth worth remembering: our value doesn’t come from what we do, but whose we are.

The baptism of Jesus reminds us that God steps into our world, humbly, obediently, and fully embraced by God’s love.

I’m Lonnie Davis and these are thoughts worth thinking.

Jesus: Aged 12

The dusty roads of Jerusalem were alive with chatter. Pilgrims from all over had come for the Passover, their sandals kicking up clouds as they moved toward the temple. Among them was a boy—a quiet, thoughtful twelve-year-old. A boy named Jesus.

After the festival, the crowds began their long journeys home. They traveled in family groups so that Mary and Joseph assumed Jesus was somewhere among the travelers, laughing with friends or walking beside distant relatives. But as the sun sank and the stars blinked awake, they realized their boy was missing.

Panic set in. Heart racing, Mary retraced her steps. She and Joseph hurried back to Jerusalem, searching the busy streets and calling his name. Then, after three days of fear and worry, they found him sitting in the temple, deep in conversation with the teachers.

The scholars leaned in, listening with amazement. This child, barely on the cusp of manhood, was asking questions that made them think, answering with a wisdom far beyond his years. He wasn’t lost. He was exactly where he was meant to be.

Mary let out a breath, relief and confusion mingling in her voice. “Son, why have you done this to us? We’ve been searching everywhere!”

Jesus, calm and sure, replied, “Did you not know I must be in my Father’s house?”

That moment was more than a boy’s adventure—it was a glimpse of his purpose. Even at twelve, Jesus had a hunger for wisdom. He trusted God’s plan. Mary and Joseph worried, but Jesus was exactly where he needed to be. His calm assurance teaches us that when we walk in faith, we are never truly lost.

I’m Lonnie Davis, and these are thoughts worth thinking.

Jesus Grew

Luke 2:52 offers a rare window into Jesus’ youth: “And Jesus grew in wisdom and stature, and in favor with God and man.” This single verse spans nearly eighteen years of Christ’s life, revealing profound truths about His development and our own spiritual journey.

Though fully God, Jesus embraced genuine human development. His growth “in favor with God” seems strange to us. How could the Son of God increase in divine favor? Yet this reveals that Jesus, in His humanity, actively cultivated His relationship with the Father. Certainly through obedience, prayer, and study. His favor wasn’t automatic; it was nurtured through devoted communion.

Jesus also “grew in favor with man.” Before performing miracles or delivering sermons, His character earned respect in Nazareth. People admired this young man’s integrity, kindness, and wisdom. His nature and behavior won hearts through ordinary daily interactions with those around him.

These silent years remind us that hidden seasons aren’t wasted—they’re foundational. Jesus spent nearly two decades in obscurity, growing spiritually, physically, and relationally. If the sinless Son of God required gradual maturation, how much more do we need patient development?

God values ordinary faithfulness. Jesus’ quiet years in carpentry, family life, and synagogue worship demonstrate that simple obedience is holy ground. Our unseen growth in character, wisdom, and relationships with God and others mirrors Christ’s own journey.

Don’t rush what God is growing in you—even silent seasons serve His perfect timing.

I’m Lonnie Davis and these are thoughts worth thinking.

Protecting Baby Jesus

Joseph and Mary and two year old Jesus fled in the night. No parade. No farewell. Just the quiet rustle of bags and the hurried steps of a family obeying God. Matthew 2:13 tells us that after the visit of the magi, an angel warned Joseph in a dream: “Get up… take the Child and His mother and flee to Egypt.” Herod, in his fury, was hunting for Jesus to kill Him.

So Mary and Joseph did what parents do, they protected their child. The road to Egypt was long—some 75 to 100 miles through rugged terrain. Not a journey of comfort, but a journey of obedience. We don’t know exactly how long they stayed in Egypt, but likely until Herod’s death, around two to three years. Long enough for Jesus’ early years to unfold in a foreign land.

There is a lesson in this. Here it is: Obedience sometimes means going places we never planned. Following God may lead through uncertainty, detours, even danger. But His path is always purposeful.

God was not just protecting a baby, He was protecting the Savior of the world. In this story, Mary and Joseph remind us that sometimes the holiest act is simply to get up, pack up, and trust.

Even if you don’t know the map, follow the Guide.

I’m Lonnie Davis, and these are thoughts worth thinking.

We 3 Kings?

Maybe it is the most famous story ever told. Wise men came from the east to see Jesus. We don’t know their names, how many there were, or exactly where they started. But we do know why they came. The magi were not kings, but wise men—learned scholars who watched the stars. When a new star appeared, brighter than the rest, they followed its trail. Not for a weekend trip, but for a journey that may have taken months, perhaps over a year.

By the time they reached Bethlehem, Jesus was no longer in a manger. Matthew 2:11 tells us they entered a house. Most scholars believe He was likely a toddler, maybe close to two years old. And yet, they bowed before Him. Grown men kneeling before a child. Why? Because they recognized what many did not—this child was a King.

They brought gifts: gold, frankincense, and myrrh. Strange presents for a baby. But each one told a story. Gold, for royalty—He is the King of kings. Frankincense, used in worship—He is divine. Myrrh, a spice for burial—He came to die. Even in their offering, the gospel was being whispered.

Their journey speaks to us. They didn’t come for what Jesus could do. They came for who He was. They weren’t driven by duty, but by awe.

Sometimes the longest journeys lead to the greatest discoveries. Read Matthew 2 and you’ll see it. Wise men still seek Him. And when they find Him, they still kneel.

I’m Lonnie Davis, and these are thoughts worth thinking.

The Shepherds Visit

On the night Jesus was born, the shepherds near Bethlehem were doing what they always did—watching over their flocks under the stars. It was an ordinary night, and they were ordinary men. Not scholars. Not priests. Just blue-collar workers of their day, often overlooked by society and even looked down upon for their lowly status. But on that quiet night outside Bethlehem, heaven opened up for them.

Luke 2:8 tells us, “And there were shepherds residing in the fields nearby, keeping watch over their flocks by night.” These men weren’t attending a temple service or studying the Scriptures. They were doing their job, staying awake, staying faithful. And that’s when the angel appeared.

Why shepherds? Because God delights in lifting the humble. He could have sent angels to Herod’s palace or the temple’s high court. But He chose the field. The forgotten. The ones who were used to silence and darkness. In doing so, God made a loud statement: *My message is for everyone. Especially those who think they’re not worthy to hear it.*

The shepherds weren’t just invited to see the baby—they were the first to spread the news. The first evangelists of the gospel were not trained theologians, but smelly shepherds.

And here’s the wonder: as God chose the shepherds, God chooses us. He still speaks in the ordinary. He still calls the humble. He still finds us in the field and says, “Come and see.”

I’m Lonnie Davis and these are thoughts worth thinking.

Why the Manger

The story of Jesus’ birth in a manger isn’t just a sweet scene for a Christmas card—it’s a sermon in straw. Luke 2:7 tells us, “She wrapped Him in cloths and placed Him in a manger.” Simple. Plain. But not by accident.

God could have chosen a palace or a temple. Instead, He chose a feeding trough. Why? Here are five possible reasons:

1. Because the manger reveals the heart of God. Jesus didn’t come to impress the powerful. He came to dwell among the ordinary. People like you and me.

2. The manger was available. And maybe that’s the whole point. There were no gates to pass through, no guards to get past. Just a quiet place where anyone could come close. The King of kings came to a space that welcomed shepherds, not senators.

3. The manger was a place of nourishment. How fitting that the Bread of Life would be laid where food was placed. One day He would say, “I am the bread of life” (John 6:35). He came to satisfy the deepest hunger of the human soul.

4. The manger reminds us—there’s no place He won’t enter. Not even the messiest corners of our world. Not even the most broken pieces of our hearts.

5. It whispers something rare in our noisy world: contentment. Joy isn’t found in luxury, but in love. Not in riches, but in relationships. Christ is enough.

So the next time you picture the manger, don’t see it as small. See it as sacred. The God of the universe wrapped Himself in flesh and chose the lowest place—so He could lift us to the highest.

I’m Lonnie Davis, and these are thoughts worth thinking.

Before He Was Jesus

Before He Was Jesus

Before Jesus came to earth as a baby in Bethlehem, He already existed. That might sound surprising, but Scripture is clear—Jesus didn’t begin in the manger. He is eternal. He was with God, and He was God. That’s how the Gospel of John opens: “In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God” (John 1:1).

Jesus, before His earthly birth, was known as the Word. He was not created; He is the Creator. “Through Him all things were made, and without Him nothing was made that has been made” (John 1:3). He existed before time. He stood beside the Father, shining with divine glory. In fact, He shared the very nature of God. As Paul wrote, “He existed in the form of God” (Philippians 2:6).

In the Old Testament, we catch glimpses of Him. When the Angel of the Lord appeared to Moses at the burning bush, many scholars believe this was Jesus, stepping briefly into time.

Before He cried in a cradle, He commanded galaxies. Before He took on skin, He shared in glory. And yet, He chose to leave it all behind for us.

That’s the wonder of His birth. The Eternal One became an infant. The Creator became one of His creations.

He was—He is—and He came for you.

I’m Lonnie Davis, and these are thoughts worth thinking.

What Do I Say?

Our question for today comes from Isaiah 40:6.

“What shall I say?”

Isaiah had just heard the voice of God telling him to cry out. But cry out what? What do you say when your strength is spent and your heart feels hollow? When the people are worn down, the days are heavy, and hope is a whisper barely heard?

So Isaiah did what many of us do—he asked the honest question: “What shall I say?”

You’ve likely asked it, too. At a hospital bedside. In a funeral line. On a sleepless night. When someone you love is hurting and you don’t have the words. What do you say when silence feels safer than saying the wrong thing?

God gave Isaiah a message—and it’s the one we still need today: Life is short, but God is steady. “All flesh is like grass,” He said. “The grass withers, the flower fades, but the word of our God stands forever.”

That’s what you say.

You speak of the God who doesn’t change. You remind weary hearts that God is still here, still near, and still strong. He will work things out —in the end.

I’m Lonnie Davis, and these are thoughts worth thinking.

Why Me, Lord?

Our question for today comes from Jeremiah 15:18.

In his agony, Jeremiah cried out, “Why is my pain unending and my wound incurable?”

Jeremiah wasn’t asking for sympathy—he was asking for relief. His pain felt permanent. His prayers seemed unanswered. His obedience had gone unrewarded. He did the right thing, and still, the wrong things kept happening.

Sound familiar? Sometimes our suffering doesn’t make sense. And when it lingers, we start to wonder if God has forgotten us—or worse, if He simply doesn’t care. That’s how Jeremiah felt.

It’s okay to admit you’re hurting. It’s okay to say it out loud. Faith isn’t pretending you’re fine. It’s trusting God enough to bring Him your hardest questions—just like Jeremiah did.

God didn’t cast Jeremiah aside. He called him deeper. He promised to strengthen him, to make him like a bronze wall (Jeremiah 15:20). Not by removing the pain, but by reinforcing the man.

We’ve all heard about the faith that moves mountains. Sometimes God moves the mountain. Sometimes He makes us strong enough to climb it.

So with Jeremiah, we can cry, “Why is my pain unending?” If you doubt that, then in a hundred years, meet me at the gates of heaven—and we’ll talk about it.

If you’re weary of the wound, take heart. God sees you.

I’m Lonnie Davis, and these are thoughts worth thinking.

How Long, O Lord?

The quote for today is from Isaiah 6:11.

“How long, O Lord?”

Isaiah had just witnessed the unthinkable—he saw the Lord seated on a throne, high and lifted up. The temple shook. The angels praised God. 

In light of God’s glory, Isaiah felt undone by his own unworthiness. But then came mercy. A coal touched his lips. His guilt was taken away. And then came the call: “Whom shall I send?”

Isaiah said yes!

But obedience doesn’t always come with applause. Sometimes it comes with silence. Or resistance. Or an assignment that feels like shouting into the wind. And that’s when Isaiah asked the question many of us whisper in the waiting: “How long, O Lord?”

How long do I serve when no one notices? How long do I love when nothing changes? How long do I pray when the heavens feel quiet?

God didn’t sugarcoat the answer. He told Isaiah it would be a long road. A road of rejection. But God also gave him a promise of victory in the end. Even if it seems delayed, it will come.

If you’re asking “how long?” Remember this, God understands. He’s not deaf to your question. He sees your faith, even in the silence. Keep going. Keep sowing. What you plant in obedience will bloom in His time. Whatever work you are doing, keep going. 

I’m Lonnie Davis, and these are thoughts worth thinking.

Who Am I?

Our question today is from Psalms 8:4

“What is man that You are mindful of him?”

Step outside tonight. Look up. See those stars scattered like diamonds on black velvet? Each one is placed by the same God who placed you here. Galaxies stretch beyond imagination, whispering glory across the darkness. And still—in all that vastness—God sees you.

David felt it too. Standing beneath that same canopy of stars, he asked the question that echoes in every human heart: “Who am I that the Creator of all this would care about me?”

But here’s the beautiful truth: He does care. The Hebrew word for “mindful” doesn’t suggest a fleeting thought. It means constant attention. Steady focus. You’re not an afterthought in God’s busy schedule. You’re actively on His mind.

The same hands that flung stars into space know the number of hairs on your head. The voice that spoke light into existence whispers your name in the darkness. He catches your tears before they fall and draws near when your heart breaks.

You are not forgotten in the crowd of seven billion people. Among the billions in the of souls from Adam to now, the God of the universe is mindful of you. That changes everything.

I’m Lonnie Davis , and these are thoughts worth thinking.

Faith In Pain

Our question comes from Job 6:11.

“What is my strength, that I should hope? And what is my end, that I should prolong my life?”


Sometimes, life wears us down. We get to the end of our strength and wonder if we have any hope left. Job felt this way. He asked, “What is my strength, that I should hope? And what is my end, that I should prolong my life?” It’s a raw, honest cry from a man who’s been through the fire. And you know what? That honesty is a gift. Because God doesn’t need us to pretend we’re okay. He wants us to bring our real feelings to Him—the doubts, the pain, the questions.

When you feel weak, remember this: faith isn’t about having all the answers or never feeling down. It’s about showing up, even when you don’t have the strength to hope. God meets us in those moments. He listens to our cries and holds us close, not because we have it all together, but because we’re willing to be real with Him.

So, if you’re weary today, bring your honesty to God. Let Him carry your burden. Your weakness is the place where His strength shines brightest. And in that, hope is born again.

I’m Lonnie Davis, and these are thoughts worth thinking.

What Shall We Do?

The question for today comes from a convicted crowd in Acts 2:37.

“What shall we do?”

It wasn’t asked with folded arms or furrowed brows. It came with wide eyes and trembling hearts. Peter had just preached the truth—that Jesus, whom they had crucified, was both Lord and Messiah. The words didn’t just inform them. They pierced them.

And their response? A question that still echoes across centuries: “What shall we do?”

Peter didn’t hand them a rulebook. He gave them a doorway. “Repent and be baptized… and you will receive the gift of the Holy Spirit” (Acts 2:38).

Grace is like that. It doesn’t leave us stunned in guilt. It invites us into something new.

If there is a God—and if Jesus really is His Son—then what else would we ask but this same question? What shall we do?

Turn. Trust. Take the next step.

Don’t overcomplicate it. You don’t need a perfect past. You just need a willing heart.

God isn’t waiting for you to figure everything out. He’s waiting for you to ask—and then to act.

Ask the question. Then follow the answer.

I’m Lonnie Davis, and these are thoughts worth thinking.

I’m Not Perfect!

Our question today comes from Job 9:2.

“How can mere mortals prove their innocence before God?”

Job was broken. He had lost everything: children, health, livelihood. And his friends? They may have been well intended, but they made it worse. They insisted he must be guilty. They said that God punishes sinners, so Job must have sinned.

Job knew better. He hadn’t lived perfectly, but he had lived faithfully. Still, he suffered. And so he asked, “How can anyone be right before God?”

That question still echoes today. How can we stand before a holy God when we’re so flawed? So fragile? So fallen?

The answer, as Job would discover, doesn’t come from our goodness—it comes from God’s grace. Righteousness isn’t earned. It is attributed to us.

One day, another innocent sufferer—Jesus—would answer Job’s cry by giving His righteousness to us.

So when you feel unworthy (and we all do), remember: The question of Job found its answer in the cross. You don’t have to be perfect to be loved. But you do have to be His.

I’m Lonnie Davis, and these are thoughts worth thinking.

Why Has This Happened?

The question for today is from Judges 6:13.

“If the Lord is with us, why has all this happened to us?”

Gideon asked the question that lives in hospital rooms and quiet bedrooms. It slips through the cracks of broken hearts: If God is really here, why is life falling apart?

He wasn’t being rebellious—just real. Life was hard. Enemies were winning. Hope felt distant. So Gideon asked what we’ve all whispered: “Where is God in all this?”

And God? He didn’t flinch. Didn’t scold. Didn’t leave. He leaned in.

He called Gideon “mighty warrior” (Judges 6:12), not because Gideon felt mighty, but because God saw beyond the fear. God saw what Gideon would become—not what he was. That’s how He sees us too.

Faith, you see, isn’t the absence of questions. It’s choosing to believe—even with tears in your eyes and doubts in your heart. God doesn’t wait for you to get it all together. He meets you right in the mess.

So if your heart has been asking, “Why has all this happened?”—you’re in good company. Gideon asked it. And God answered, not with an explanation, but with a calling.

God’s presence isn’t proven by ease—it’s revealed in the middle of the storm.

I’m Lonnie Davis and these are thoughts worth thinking.

Am I My Brother’s Keeper?

Our question for today is from Genesis 4:9.

“Am I my brother’s keeper?”

Cain’s question still lingers in the air, doesn’t it? It was the first recorded deflection after the first recorded murder. God asked, “Where is your brother Abel?” Cain didn’t confess. He deflected. “Am I my brother’s keeper?” But that wasn’t an answer—it was an excuse.

Cain had followed in the footsteps of his parents. When Adam and Eve disobeyed, they dodged the truth too. Adam blamed Eve. Eve blamed the serpent. Nobody wanted to admit what they’d done. But deflection never fools God. He doesn’t ask because He’s unaware. He asks because He wants our hearts.

God could have simply answered Cain’s question with a firm “Yes.” Instead, He responded with sorrow: “Your brother’s blood cries out to Me from the ground.”

We’ve been asking the same question ever since. “Do I have to care?” “Is it really my problem?” We close our eyes to pain that isn’t ours. But grace opens them.

Yes, you are your brother’s keeper—and your sister’s too. You’re called to care, not to hide. To help, not to walk away.

So look around today. Someone near you needs keeping. And God is still whispering, “Where is your brother?”

I’m Lonnie Davis and these are thoughts worth thinking.